It doesn't survive shrinking.
Hairline limbs, multi-strand hair, and tiny facial detail turn to mud at small sizes — it's already breaking down at header and favicon scale.
Brand Identity Exploration · Prepared for the Owner
Green Sprout has spent three decades building a reputation most lawn companies can't match — the crew called in when the acreage is too big and the property too important. This document presents eight distinct identity directions for that reputation. Each one is a complete, considered world: its own mark, its own palette, its own typography, and an honest read of where it's strong and where it asks for compromise. Nothing here is final. Everything here is a real choice.
Where We Are Today
Before looking forward, an honest look at the mark in use now. The idea behind it is genuinely good — a little sprout character that spells out the name. But as it's drawn, it works against the company at the sizes and in the places customers actually see it. Here's the clear diagnosis.
Header size
Small / mobile
Favicon sizeThe wordmark stays readable — but the character blurs into a green smudge exactly where it shows up most: the website header, the browser tab, an embroidered polo.
Hairline limbs, multi-strand hair, and tiny facial detail turn to mud at small sizes — it's already breaking down at header and favicon scale.
The figure is thin lines and fills joined by skinny limbs, with no confident shape holding it together. Squint and it dissolves into texture.
Vein lines on every leaf, separate hair strands, two-tone shading — that's illustration detail, not logo detail. All that sticks is "leafy green stick guy."
Long thin limbs, pale oval eyes, and splayed leaf-hands land closer to eerie than charming — the wrong note for a warm, homeowner-facing brand.
A walking plant-man reads as "plant," not "we mow and maintain large properties." There's no category cue — no blade, stripe, or mower in sight.
The figure and wordmark appear in different illustration styles and fonts across the website and printed ads, so customers don't get an instant "same company" hit.
The fix isn't to throw this out. The sprout character is distinctive and ownable, the name-made-literal is memorable, the greens are on-category, and the wordmark itself is fine. Every direction that follows keeps the good idea — and gives it a mark that finally holds up everywhere.
The Brief
Before a single mark is chosen, the brand has to know what it stands for. These are the constants — the things that stay true no matter which visual direction wins. Read them as the brief each of the eight options is answering in its own way.
Green Sprout's real edge isn't a single mowed lawn — it's the equipment, crew, and experience to take on commercial grounds and large acreage that other companies turn away. The brand should read capable and established first, friendly second.
Most lawn-care logos are interchangeable — a leaf, a swoosh, two greens. The sprout idea is distinctive and nameable. Whatever direction wins, it should keep a clear line of sight back to "a young thing, growing."
A property manager reviewing a commercial bid and a homeowner waving at the truck want different things. The strongest directions can speak to both — warmth where it helps, gravitas where it counts.
Brand Strategy
A brand is more than a logo — it's the backbone the visuals hang on. Before colours and characters, these are the few things that stay fixed while everything visual flexes. Every direction in this document is built to express this strategy.
The brand essence — the core idea in a single line. Every mark, message, and decision should ladder back to it: a property restored, kept healthy, and worth coming home to.
To keep the Edmonton area's properties — the big, the demanding, the well-loved — healthy, cared-for, and a credit to the people who own them.
To be the name Edmonton-area owners and property managers think of first whenever a lawn or acreage is more than the average company can handle.
Show up with the equipment and experience others don't have, do the work properly, and treat every property — quarter-acre or quarter-section — like it matters.
Four values — and the behaviour that proves each one, so they're more than words on a wall.
Shows up as: specialized machinery, 30 years on the job, and a yes to the acreage no one else will quote.
Shows up as: contracts honoured, schedules kept, and AASP COR-certified safety on every site.
Shows up as: owner-run, Edmonton-area through and through, and a real person on the other end.
Shows up as: straight pricing, no upsell theatre, and a clear read of what a property actually needs.
Personality
A consistent personality is what makes a truck, a quote, and a wave from the cab feel like one company. Naming the archetype keeps every future ad, post, and proposal in character — warm and capable, never cute or corporate.
Core motivation: service. "We bring it back to life" is a caregiver's promise — nurturing a property back to health and keeping it that way.
Local, unpretentious, neighbourly — the crew you'd actually want working on your street, not a faceless franchise.
A streak of outdoorsy toughness and proven capability keeps the warmth from tipping into soft. Big gear, big jobs, done right.
The neighbour who's run his own crew for thirty years. Shows up early, knows every acreage in the county, calls it straight, and takes real pride in a property that looks cared-for. Warm with homeowners, all business with a commercial contract — and never once oversells you.
The Story
The brand isn't starting from nothing. It's standing on three decades of work in and around Edmonton. These facts are the foundation the visual identity gets to amplify.
Owner-operated and trusted in the Edmonton area since the early 1990s — the kind of longevity a brand should wear proudly, not bury.
An AASP Certificate of Recognition — a genuine safety credential that matters when commercial and acreage contracts are on the line.
Specialized heavy machinery for large properties. The yellow of that equipment is a natural, ownable accent the all-green competition can't claim.
Serving Edmonton, Beaumont, Leduc, Nisku, Morinville, Sherwood Park, St. Albert, Sturgeon County, Strathcona County, Parkland County, and the surrounding area — the established local specialist for acreage and commercial property care.
The Mark Today
The current logo is the starting point, and it deserves credit: it's a real character, it's distinctive, and the sprout concept is exactly right. What it's missing isn't a new idea — it's the structure that turns one drawing into a brand that holds up everywhere.
The character and the name made literal. A leafy little figure is far more memorable than another generic leaf mark. That instinct is worth protecting.
The greens. The palette is on-category and already carries recognition. It needs defining precisely — not reinventing.
Reduction. Fine limbs and interior detail muddy at small sizes — in the website header, on a favicon, on an embroidered polo. A logo is judged at the size customers actually see it.
One consistent identity. Today the figure and wordmark appear in more than one style across touchpoints. A defined system makes the brand instantly recognizable from ad to truck to invoice.
A real toolkit. A primary lockup, an icon for tight spaces, single-color and reversed versions. Every direction below is built to deliver that.
The Spectrum
The directions aren't random — they map onto a single spectrum, from keeping the warm, recognizable character you already have, all the way to a crisp corporate symbol built for proposals and contracts. There's no wrong end. There's only the end that fits where the business is headed. Tap any mark to jump to its full direction.
Direction One
"The company you already know — sharpened up."
This direction doesn't replace the character — it evolves it. The same lanky, leaf-limbed figure that's been on the trucks and the invoices, redrawn with a confident two-tone treatment, a clean outline, and a friendly face set into the head. The grass tuft becomes a few bold shapes instead of a tangle of strands.
The argument here is continuity. Three decades of recognition is an asset, and a brand-new mascot quietly throws it away. Anyone who already knows Green Sprout connects with this one instantly.
#5FA63F · 95 166 63Character fill, friendly energy#1C4427 · 28 68 39Outline, headlines, depth#F3ECD9 · 243 236 217Warm canvas / backgrounds#5A4632 · 90 70 50Grounding neutral, body text#E0A92E · 224 169 46Accent, highlights, CTAsA sturdy slab carries an established, hand-built feel — the look of a sign that's been out front for years. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · detail softensDirection Two
"Approachable, local — the friendly face at the door."
A solid, rounded sprout person with a confident silhouette and a genuinely warm face. Where the heritage figure is an illustration, this one is built like a mascot: bold shapes, thick limbs, a clean wave. It reads friendly and local the instant you see it — the personality that makes a homeowner remember the truck.
This is also the most developed direction. It already has a working lockup family — primary, stacked, icon, and reversed — so it's the closest to ready-to-roll.




#2EA84F · 46 168 79The character, primary brand color#18512A · 24 81 42Wordmark, headlines, depth#E7F4E6 · 231 244 230Soft backgrounds#FFC42E · 255 196 46Accent, CTAs, highlights#FFFDF6 · 255 253 246The face, clean spaceRounded geometric letters echo the soft, friendly forms of the character without tipping into childish. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · use the head icon below thisDirection Three
"Modern and clean — works at any size."
The body was always where the problems lived. The head — a friendly face under three clean shoots — was always the part that worked. This direction makes that head the whole mark: a tight, balanced badge that reads as "sprout" instantly and survives all the way down to a favicon.
It's the all-rounder. Distinctive enough to be ownable, clean enough to look serious on a proposal, and warm enough to feel like the same friendly company on a phone screen. If one mark has to do everything, this is the strongest candidate.




#2E7D32 · 46 125 50The mark, primary brand color#11301C · 17 48 28Text, UI, dark surfaces#EDF4EE · 237 244 238App surfaces, backgrounds#BFE357 · 191 227 87Accent, active states#FFFFFF · 255 255 255The face, clear spaceA contemporary geometric sans keeps the system feeling current and screen-native, scaling cleanly from a button to a billboard. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · still readsDirection Four
"Established and corporate — contract-ready."
A confident capital G with a small sprout growing from the opening of the letter — the initial and the idea fused into one mark. It's the most corporate option, and because it's built from the company's real letter, it's more ownable than any generic plant symbol could be.
This is the mark that looks at home on a letterhead, a commercial proposal, or an embossed business card. It pairs naturally with the wordmark and scales without flinching.


#14331E · 20 51 30The mark, primary brand color#C2A14A · 194 161 74Premium accent, foil / detail#ECE7DA · 236 231 218Stationery, backgrounds#2A2C28 · 42 44 40Body text#FFFFFF · 255 255 255Clear spaceA high-contrast serif signals permanence and professionalism — the visual language of a company that wins the contract. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · excellentDirection Five
"The craft itself, made into a mark."
A single bold leaf — but its veins are mowing stripes, the alternating light-and-dark rows of a freshly cut lawn angling toward the center. It's two readings in one shape: "green and growing," and "we mow, beautifully." That double-read is genuinely ownable in a category full of plain leaves.
It fuses the name and the actual service into one confident symbol, and it does it without a face, a circle, or any of the usual clichés. This is the most distinctive of the symbol-led directions.
#2E7D32 · 46 125 50The lit stripes, primary#173E1E · 23 62 30The shaded stripes, depth#8DC63F · 141 198 63Highlight, accent#25251E · 37 37 30Text, grounding#F4F1E6 · 244 241 230Backgrounds, clear spaceA crafted geometric display with an engineered body face mirrors the precision of a perfectly striped field. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · use one-color fallbackDirection Six
"Orderly rows, a sprout rising — we work the big properties."
A young sprout rising from neat, parallel rows of freshly mown ground. Where the leaf hides the craft inside a symbol, this one shows it outright: this is a company that maintains large, orderly, well-kept properties. It tells the acreage story more explicitly than anything else in the set.
It's grounded and capable — the kind of mark that signals scale and seriousness to a commercial buyer while staying unmistakably about growth and green.



#2F7D33 · 47 125 51The sprout, primary#163A20 · 22 58 32The rows, headlines#DDEBCF · 221 235 207Light backgrounds#F2C200 · 242 194 0Accent — ties to the machinery#6B5B45 · 107 91 69Grounding neutral, body textA sturdy slab carries weight and machinery-grade confidence — established, grounded, built to last. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · simplify rowsDirection Seven
"Simple, trustworthy, universally legible."
A clean three-leaf seedling rising from a mound, held in a simple circle. It's calm, credible, and grown-up — it communicates "growth and landscaping" instantly, and it would look perfectly at home on a commercial proposal or a uniform.
We include it because it's the safe, conventional benchmark — the version of "what a landscaping logo looks like" that every option above is measured against.
#1B3A24 · 27 58 36The mark, primary#8AA17C · 138 161 124Soft secondary, calm accent#F4F4EE · 244 244 238Backgrounds#39463D · 57 70 61Body text#FFFFFF · 255 255 255Clear spaceAn elegant, restrained serif keeps the tone quiet and trustworthy — minimal by intention. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
96px
48px
24px · thicken ringDirection Eight
"The name, set with confidence — the most corporate option."
Green Sprout
The most corporate end of the spectrum: make the name itself the identity. "Green Sprout" set in a strong, characterful typeface, with a small sprout glyph growing from the lettering as a quiet signature. No mascot, no badge — just a confident, ownable piece of typography.
It's the most flexible direction of all. It scales without limit, reads instantly, sits cleanly on a proposal or an invoice, and works in a single line of vehicle lettering. Where the company name needs to do the talking, this does it best.
#16331F · 22 51 31The wordmark, primary#2E7D32 · 46 125 50The sprout glyph, accent#E9ECE4 · 233 236 228Backgrounds, stationery#14201A · 20 32 26Body text#FFFFFF · 255 255 255Clear spaceA confident grotesque with just enough character carries the whole identity — distinctive, legible, and credible at any scale. The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
A Bigger Idea
The smartest outcome may not be a single winner. A brand can run more than one mark, each doing the job it's best at — a clean icon for small and digital, a full character for warmth and trucks, a symbol for the moments that call for gravitas. One personality, different registers.

The sprout-head badge as the everyday workhorse — favicon, app, social, embroidery, anywhere small. Scales without breaking.

The full character on trucks, signage, and the website hero — where there's room for personality and recognition matters most.

A symbol — the mown leaf or the monogram — for commercial proposals, letterhead, and the rooms where capability has to lead.
Our Recommendation
If we had to advise a single path, this is it. Keep the sprout — it's the recognizable idea — but stop asking one drawing to do every job. Give the brand a small, disciplined kit: a clean signature, a tough little icon for small spaces, a character for warmth, and a grounded symbol for the commercial room. Friendly without becoming childish; professional without becoming generic.
GreenThe everyday lockup that leads the website header, quotes, proposals, and email — clean, legible, and unmistakably theirs.

The strongest small-use asset — it keeps the character's equity without the body, hands, and detail that fall apart as a favicon, an app icon, or an embroidered polo.

Used only where there's room — truck graphics, signage, social posts, and family-friendly residential touchpoints. The warmth, kept in its lane so it never has to shrink.

For proposals, invoices, uniforms, and formal materials. Of the support-mark options — mown leaf, G-monogram, field stripe — the mown leaf earns it: it ties the brand to the actual service, professionally maintained, large mowed properties. A plain seedling-in-a-circle is too generic to carry this role.
"We're keeping the sprout, because it's the recognizable idea — but turning it into a real brand system: a clean icon for small uses, a professional wordmark for trust, and a character version for warmth."
Distinctive Brand Assets
Strong brands are built on a handful of assets used relentlessly until they trigger the brand without the name — a colour, a character, a phrase. The goal isn't to look different every year; it's to own these and protect them. Here's the honest read on what Green Sprout has, and what each one is worth.
High uniqueness, real local recognition. No competitor can copy it — this is the asset the whole rebrand should protect. Redraw it to hold up small; never replace it.
A verbal asset with personality and a clear category cue. Say it for years, on the hero, the trucks, the ads — repetition is what turns a line into an asset.
Genuinely uncommon in a category drowning in green. Drawn from the machinery itself, it's both ownable and true. Use it as the deliberate spark.
An ownable graphic device that literally pictures the service — striped, professionally mown ground. Underused today; make it a signature texture across the system.
Lock one treatment and never substitute it. Consistency of the name in one form is the cheapest, highest-return asset there is.
On its own, "green" is a category cliché every rival shares. It only becomes an asset as one specific, locked green-plus-evergreen pairing — owned through precision, not hue.
Borrowed from Jenni Romaniuk's Asset Strength Grid — high fame and high uniqueness is where brand value lives.
Invest · your brand codes
The sprout character, the equipment yellow, the "bring it back to life" line, the wordmark. Use always, everywhere — these are the engine.
Potential · use or lose
The mowing-stripe pattern. Distinctive but under-built — commit to it consistently and it climbs into the Invest quadrant.
Cemetery · others claim it too
Generic green and the lone leaf/seedling. Recognized as "a lawn company," but shared with every competitor. Don't lean the identity on them.
Avoid
Stock swooshes, clip-art grass blades, trendy gradients. Nothing to gain — keep them out of the system entirely.
Distinctive assets are built over decades, not campaigns — and the fastest way to throw away brand value is a well-meaning annual "refresh." Pick the assets above, then use them the same way, everywhere, for years. Even the senses count: the smell of fresh-cut grass and the clean lines of a striped, mown lawn are Green Sprout's natural sensory signatures — photography and design should lean into both.
In The Wild
A mark only earns its keep when it survives the real surfaces — a truck door seen across a lot, a business card in a hand, a favicon in a browser tab. Here's the system on the places that matter, shown with the Sprout-Head Badge; whichever direction is chosen maps to these same surfaces.
Green Sprout
Lawn · Acreage · Commercial
Est. 1993 · Edmonton, AB
Green Sprout

Shared Foundations
Whichever direction wins, these principles carry across the whole system. A defined master palette, a disciplined type approach, and clear rules for the logo are what turn a nice mark into a brand that stays consistent for years.
Green and evergreen do the work, cream is the canvas, and one warm accent — drawn from the equipment yellow already in the field — is the spark used on the single thing you want clicked. Every direction's palette above is a tuned expression of this core.
#14331EWordmark · headings · footer#2E7D32Icon · buttons · active states#7CB342Secondary · highlights#D9EF82Accent tints#F2C200CTAs · accents — sparingly#FBF8F1Page background#5A5A52Body & secondary copy#FFFFFFClear spaceOne display face for headlines, one workhorse sans for body and UI. Headlines in evergreen, body in grey or evergreen. Set a clear scale and hold it.
Rebuild the chosen mark as clean SVG paths with a single solid shape and an exact green — not an upscaled image. Define minimum sizes and clear space.
Talk like a capable operator, not a brochure. Lead with the differentiator — acreage, commercial, three decades, certified — before the seasonal services.
Sturdy, local, and legible beats fancy or delicate. Pick one headline face and one workhorse sans, then hold that pairing everywhere — website, ads, favicon, and print — because the real gap today is consistency, not just the logo.
Rounded and welcoming — the right note if the brand leans residential and personable.
Sturdy and capable — the right note if the brand leans commercial and acreage-first.
Legible at every size — from a quote PDF to a phone screen to a truck decal.
Mental Availability
People don't think about lawn care most of the time — until a specific moment makes them. Those moments are the brand's real battleground: the goal is to be the first name that surfaces when each one hits. These are the ones worth owning, and the asset that should answer each.
The flagship moment — high frequency, weak competition, perfect fit. Lead with "Acreage looking rough?" and the warm character.
Answer with the mown-leaf mark and proof: COR-certified, contracts kept, low-disruption, curb appeal that reflects on the business.
Reassure with neighbourly warmth — "the crew you call when it's too big" — and the friendly, approachable face of the brand.
The literal "we bring it back to life" moment. Seasonal cleanup as the easy, obvious first call after a long winter.
Snow & winter services keep the brand year-round, not seasonal — and deepen the commercial relationship through the off-season.
A curb-appeal sprint: tidy, striped, photo-ready ground that helps a property show. A small but high-intent moment.
The acreage and commercial moments are where Green Sprout is most ownable — frequent, weakly contested, and a perfect fit for the equipment and experience. Build there first, then let residential and seasonal ride the same recognition. The aim is to be present for every category buyer — the once-a-year homeowner as much as the contract client — because broad reach, not a small loyal base, is what grows a brand.
Voice & Messaging
The verbal half of the brand matters as much as the visual. The tone is plainspoken, confident, and local — a capable crew, not a marketing brochure. Lead with the differentiator: the big properties, the three decades, the certification — before the seasonal services everyone offers.
"Acreage looking rough? We bring it back to life."
Thirty years on Edmonton's biggest properties.
The crew you call when the job's too big.
Commercial-grade care, neighbourly service.
Four dials that keep every writer in the same register — confident and warm, never stiff or jokey.
A master line everyone leads with, tuned for each audience — same brand, same proof, different emphasis.
The equipment and crew to tame the property the average company won't touch.
Dependable, low-disruption grounds maintenance — safety, curb appeal, contracts kept.
A cared-for yard, from neighbours who treat it like their own.
30 years · AASP COR-certified · specialized equipment · owner-run · Edmonton & area.
Beyond the Mark
A logo is only the start. The same positioning — established, capable, local, built for big properties — has to carry into the website, the copy, and the way the services are organized. These are the highest-leverage moves once a direction is locked.
The site currently opens on "Spring Clean Up Services" — seasonal and small, when the business is established and capable. The company's own footer line is far stronger. Any of these lead with the real story:
30 years of lawn and property care for Edmonton-area acreages, commercial sites, and homes.
Recommended — it's already their strongest line, hiding in the footer.Acreage, commercial, and residential property care across Edmonton and surrounding areas.
Commercial, acreage, and residential grounds care from a local team with 30 years of experience.
Today the list runs from spring cleanup to winter vehicle jump-starts — capable, but scattered. Six buckets tell the story cleanly and put the specialty first:
The specialty. Large-property mowing, trimming, and upkeep most companies can't take on.
Reliable, low-disruption care for property managers and businesses — safety, curb appeal, seasonal contracts.
Friendly, dependable service for homes — mowing, edging, and a yard that always looks looked-after.
Spring and fall resets — the heavy lifting that gets a property ready for the season ahead.
Snow removal and winter response that keeps driveways, lots, and walkways open and safe.
Arborist services, fertilization, and aeration to keep the whole property thriving — not just mowed.
Small changes to the existing site that close the gap between how established the business actually is and how it currently reads.
Move the 30 years, the AASP Certificate of Recognition, and the specialized equipment near the top of the homepage — not buried below the fold.
Swap the Outlook address for info@greensprout.ca. A three-decade company should have an address that matches its own domain.
Make "Book Services Now" the bold, filled button and "Explore Services" a quieter outline link — so the primary action is always obvious.
Drop the leftover cleaning-company language about "cleanliness" and "a clean home." Speak to reliability, safety, curb appeal, seasonal contracts, and low-disruption maintenance.
Label testimonials by who they're from — property manager, acreage owner, commercial site, residential client — so they speak directly to the buyers being courted.
Choosing a Direction
The "best" mark isn't the prettiest drawing — it's the one that fits where the business is going. Answer these two questions and the field narrows almost on its own.
Should the brand lead with residential friendliness, or with commercial-and-acreage gravitas? Warm points to the Character or Badge. Serious points to the Monogram, Mown Leaf, or Field.
Is the existing character's recognition worth preserving, or is this the moment for a clean start? Keep points to Heritage. Refresh opens the full range of new marks.
Choose the single direction that fits, or a small system: a core icon plus a warm character, or a symbol for the formal work.
Redraw the chosen mark as true vector — clean paths, one solid shape, a solid white face where there is one — and test it at 16px and 32px.
Define exact green, evergreen, accent, cream, and grey in HEX, RGB, CMYK, and Pantone. Test the greens in print so they don't shift.
Website header and favicon, hero, business cards, vehicle and trailer decals, invoices and quotes, email signature, social profiles.